пятница, 26 августа 2016 г.

Slap Dash Mom

Slap Dash Mom

1. Set goals. Obviously your first goal is to earn back the money you spent on your inventory! But what’s next? Follow a few YouTubers along their journey as you figure out what your goals are going to be.

Vanessa – a plus size gal that rocks all the looks she wears; 3 months in she sold $22,000 in March alone!

LuLaRoe502 – two gals that tell you about everything from earning the investment back, to planning and hosting pop-ups. I love these girls, and their videos!

Tiffany Cook – talks about the investment, how to earn it back, and more.

2. Know your why. Running a LuLaRoe business is a lot of work! If you don’t have a solid “why”, you are going to burn out rather quickly.

Why questions include:

Why did you sign up?

Why are you putting all this work in?

Why are you going to stick with it?

What’s your “end game”? What’s the point of doing this?

Knowing your “why” is essential to any business, but especially one you’ll be investing $5,000+ into!

3. Brand yourself. LuLaRoe is already branded. When you see LLR leggings, you know they’re LLR! Now, you need to brand yourself. This includes business cards, yard signs for your pop-up shops (so people know how to find your party!), return address labels and even extra labels to add on your bubble mailers. On a side note, be sure to invest in a high-quality thermal printer. Thermal printers only use toner, so it’ll save you quite a bit of money printing it all in gotprint.com because they’re the highest quality and way less expensive.

4. Be prepared. Check out this list of “must haves” that you’ll want to purchase before launching your LuLaRoe business. Watch all the videos you can; join groups and take tons of notes! Get your inventory system read, and make sure you order your ), a tripod (even if you’re just using a cell phone), chalk board, and dress form (hosting multi-consultant pop-up shops are both great ways to work with other LLR folks that can help you grow. You can help them grow, too! Maybe you have a print they don’t have. Offer to send it to their customer for them, and then they’ll “owe” ya one. Or maybe they can trade you a print that you really want. Either way, working with other consultants is the way to go. Don’t see them as competition.

Melanie is the first LuLaRoe consultant I met, and she’s wonderful! I’ve actually done a review for her on the blog and would love to see some of you connect with her.